I
can’t find this item elsewhere, but if it is valid then it does seem rather
crass, considering their statement for refusal is that ‘it is too soon after
his death to evaluate the merits of shortlisting.’
Burgess
died in 1993 – twenty-two years ago. I know he was prolific - he wrote 33
novels, 25 non-fiction pieces, three symphonies, over 150 other musical works
and other works – but surely by now, not to mention over his lifetime, the
merits of his output should be plain.
There
is a UK plaque in honour of Burgess at the University of Manchester, which was
unveiled in 2012. There is also a plaque outside his flat in Monaco, where he
lived for seventeen years.
Born
on February 25, 1917, in Manchester, England, Anthony Burgess was a novelist,
poet, playwright, screenwriter and composer. He was fluent in nine languages. Well known
novels included The Wanting Seed, Inside Mr. Enderby, Earthly
Powers and A Clockwork Orange; the latter was adapted into a
popular though controversial 1971 Stanley Kubrik film. He died on November 22,
1993 in London.
I
have many favourite authors, and he is one of them. Leslie Thomas called him ‘a
writer’s author’. There is an affectionate and enlightening lengthy article by Blake
Morrison in the Guardian, (February 2015) concerning Burgess:
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